56 to tþe 'e(11 .f' "put Id test.. blÏ .,d fo c rc I rile ecia Is . Inner 5 as served at Schrattt's COLUMBUS ROOM, 220 W. 57TH ST. PIONEER ROOM, 625 MADISON AVE. WALNUT ROOM, 141 W. 42ND ST. In these smart comfortable rooms Schrafft's feature the tenderest, juiciest of steaks...the meatiest of live lobsters...the finest of young chickens...and the plumpest of English lamb chops... broiled-over- live-coals to savory perfection! And, with each order, a salad bowl and assorted hot breads! These features satisfy your keenest appetite. In fact, for robust de- liciousness we'll match 'em against all comers-any tilne-in a blind- fold test! This evening-any evening-give them a sporting chance! \1R FFT'5 1\ days tïl Xmas Just enough spruce up your . time to and e \4 ' : , \ I: <. _7 . \ ) " ' J b fL-- J? :t-;.;.:;-' -:--' .::.-/ .<::::'- f ([í(. \ r j\) )(\: \ ," . ,. l \ ...., , {:f' '^> This week, start your Dorothy Gray d b y Chnstnìas, treatments . . . an , . greet holiday parties with lovel er skin, happier figure, blithe spints. A combination course that New Yorkers dote on includes 6 full-hour Face Treatments nd 6 full-hour Body Massages. ($40.) Both treat- . d " " dual ized to Y our needs. ments In IVl B d y Massa g e helps take the edge o b mad off tension brought on y . shopping sprees, late-hour parnes. Skilfully devised to. su?due a portly look about the waIstline.. .enco ur - age a streanì-line fit for your party clothes. Other Dorothy Gray courses Exercise Squash Racquets, or . . . b .' $ 1 0 to $67.50. corn Inations . . . . C . ht 1938 by DorothY Gray Co., Ltd. oI>yng-, ' tJ) 683 Fifth Avenue, Near 54th Street . Wickersham 2-6109 . Ask for "Appointment Desk" guished for its respectability and intelli- " 1 " 1 .." gence, t le ot ler constItutIng my ene- 111ies and revilers." Nowhere were these events 1110re faithfully followed than in New York, vlhere the visitor was to appear for the first ti111e in the sa111e city with Forrest. O N .i\.pril 23, 1849, the ..A.111erican opened at the Broadway Theatre, near Pearl Street. Macready opc:ned :\1ay 7 th at the .L stor Place Opera I-Iouse, at the point of the wedge bound- ed by Lafayette Place, Eighth Street, and Astor Place. This choice of theatres confirmed the contention of Forrest's admirers. The barnlike Broadway held four thousand persons, and the seats had no backs. The Astor was the spiffiest playhouse in America. Its eighteen hun- dred seats were seldom filled, however, owing in part to the popular belief that one had to wear a boiled shirt and white gloves to get in. The press made fun of the Astor's snooty pretensions, and with- in a year after its opening, in 1847, the inexperienced owners, a syndicate of so- cially i111portant New Yorkers, found themselves with a white elephant. They looked to Macready, booked for. a 1110nth's engage111ent, to reduce the de- ficit. The yolu111e of the ad vance sale für the opening night was encüuraging, but not the character. Captain Rynders of the Empire Club bought fifty tickets. 1\. crowd awaited the opening of the doors at six-thirty in the evening. At seven, a haJJ-hour before curtain ti111c, the theatre was filled and one news- paper reporter esti111ated, in his next 1110rning's account, that a third of those present did not have the look of habi- tués of the Astor. The play was "Macbeth." In the fi rst scene W. C. Clarke, an American playing Malcolm, was cheered by all hands. In the third scene Macrcad y appeared. Authentic Astorites cheered their best but the catcalls of a more lusty- lunged minority drowned them out. An egg plopped at the Englishman's feet; potatoes and old shoes rained down; the odor of asafetida fined the thea- tre. "Three cheers for Edwin Forrest! " "Three groans for the codfish aris- tocracy!" Loyal Astorites called for cheers for Macready and carried the111 off pretty well. The players went on speaking lines which no one heard. A chair sailed down from the balcony. Macready dodged it, smiling. A second chair, falling short, dispersed the orches- tra. The scream of a woman in a box diverted Macreadv's eve from a third chair until it was a]1110st on hi111. He